Saturday, March 28, 2009

EU urges Netanyahu to employ 2-state solution


PM-designate warned that 'relations will become very difficult' unless he commits to US-backed plan
Reuters

The European Union warned Prime Minister-designate Benjamin Netanyahu on Friday that EU ties with his country would suffer if he did not accept Palestinian calls for statehood.
Asked how a failure to commit to the goal would affect EU-Israel ties, Czech Foreign Minister Karel Schwarzenberg, whose country currently holds the rotating presidency of the EU, said: "Relations would become very difficult indeed. At one of our next ministerial meetings we would have to discuss what consequences the EU would draw from that."


Speaking after EU talks, Schwarzenberg did not elaborate but Luxembourg's Jean Asselborn said a long-mooted upgrading of EU-Israeli trade and political ties depended on Israel achieving a peace deal with the Palestinians.


"We must tell the Israelis that it is not allowed to walk away from the peace process... The upgrading process was always to be viewed from the perspective of the peace process having been completed," Asselborn told reporters.



The EU already put talks on an upgrade of ties with Israel on hold in January after the IDF's offensive in the Gaza Strip.



Netanyahu plans to present his new coalition government for parliamentary approval next week.


"We Europeans are insisting that whatever the weighting is in the two governments (Israeli and Palestinian), the creation of a two-state solution must stand first and foremost," German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said.


"We should not always have to start from the beginning again -- that is my urgent appeal," he told reporters at talks with EU counterparts in the Czech Republic.

Comment:
The EU making such demands? Given what is allowed to occur in their countries, we should avoid at all costs listening to them.

1 comment:

Aryeh said...

The strange thing is that even if the EU pressure were successful, it would not result in a "sovereign state" as we understand it.

Surely EU leaders have read the Geneva Accords and understood their implications, no? So what are they so upset about with Netanyahu?

http://mostlyonisrael.blogspot.com/2009/03/two-state-myth.html

Thanks,

Aryeh.